Friday, March 18, 2011

Game Day

Form IIIA was 2 periods ahead of Form IIIB because of stupid schedule problems, so on Friday last week and Monday this week, Form IIIA had the pleasure of Game Day and an American English class while IIIB was catching up.

Game Day included 3-legged races, Simon Says, and the human knot. 3-legged races kind of failed, but Simon Says was a hit. We used it to practice action verbs and prepositions, and it was great to have the “but Simon didn’t say!” caveat thrown in to make them think. Emily and I acted quite juvenile when people did things wrong, pointing at them and yelling “OHH!!” so that the rest of the class would see them doing whatever it was wrong, and laughing at us and each other helped them get into the game actually. We’d never get away with that in a U.S. classroom, but here it works out.

The human knot went really well too. It has little to do with English, but it works on logic, something that sometimes is lacking from this education system. Groups stand in a circle, and grab the hands of two other people across the circle from them. Then they have to maneuver themselves so that they are untangled. That’s the best I can explain. But they did it really well, infinitely better than my Form I class did the first week of school. The best part was when a normally very quiet girl was totally taking charge of her group and telling them what to do (and rocking it), and then when they had finished she went around to other groups to help them.

Our American English class was completely hilarious. We taught things like “What’s up?” (which, as one of our students pointed out, makes absolutely no sense), and “How’s it going?” We also taught them to pronounce things in a more American way. Instead of saying “good morning,” we say something more like “guhmornin.” But by far the most hilarious part was explaining all the different ways to say “yes,” “no,” and “I don’t know.”

Yes. Yep. Yup. Yeah. Uh-huh. Mhmm.
No. Nope. Nah. Nu-uh. Uh-uh. Mm-mm.
I don’t know. I dunno. Idno. (and then the sound we make similar uh-uh, and the one similar to mm-mm, accompanied by a shoulder shrug).

We had them repeat all of them, and then all of the similar sounds (i.e. all the mm ones) in succession. A lot of them thought it was hilarious, especially “yep” and “yeah,” and now whenever we ask them at the end of class if they have understood, someone always answers with one of those. It’s pretty funny that now we sort of have a bunch of inside jokes with that class. Anyway, that’s all that I have for today.

1 comment:

Sue said...

Still enjoying blog. Sounds like fun and learning all wrapped up together. Bonnie